ID | 188673 |
Title Proper | Establishing the limits of the liberal international order |
Other Title Information | Latin America and the demand for development |
Language | ENG |
Author | Thornton, Christy |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Using a historical analysis based on archival research in Mexico, the United States, and Great Britain, this article argues that as Latin American negotiators waged campaigns for reforms to rules for trade, investment, and development lending in the twentieth century, they came to inadvertently illustrate what was acceptable and what was impossible within the terms of the Liberal International Order (LIO). In each of the three episodes examined, US government officials actually acquiesced to the demands of experts and political figures from the developing world, agreeing to broad international frameworks that were intended to scale-up the welfarist vision of ‘embeddedness’ to the international arena. But in each of these cases, those government officials subsequently saw their concessions vetoed by the action of powerful capitalist interests fearful of what the limits to power might mean for their bottom lines. It was in this struggle unfolding over time—as representatives from Latin America and elsewhere in the industrialising world tried to build an infrastructure of development that would meaningfully embed US capital in a framework of rights and obligations, and as capital organised to respond, rallying business associations and allied government representatives—that the limits of the LIO came to be defined. |
`In' analytical Note | Cambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 35, No.5; Oct 2022: p.680-697 |
Journal Source | Cambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 35 No 5 |
Key Words | Latin America ; Liberal International Order ; Demand For Development |